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How Very Good Small Crucibles Are Made, And Small Shells For Melting All Kinds Of Metals.SINCE I promised you above when speaking of the melting of metals to teach you to make small crucibles and shells for melting, I do not wish to fail in my promise. For, in truth, since they are instru
Jan 1, 1942
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New York Paper - Chart showing the Production of Anthracite Coal in the Lehigh, Schuylkill, and Wyoming Regions; Anthracite, Bituminous, and Charcoal Pig Iron in the United States, and Petroleum in Pennsylvania, from 1820 to 1876By John Henry Harden
It appears that in the earlier days of anthracite coal mining, 1824-25, the Lehigh region mined 76 per cent. of all the coal sent to market. During the same period Wyoming sent 12 and 5 per cent. resp
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Caving Methods at MiamiBy Arthur Notman
THE matters I had intended to present to you ap-peared in the March 12 issue of Engineering and Mining Journal over the signature of George J. Young, so that although I should like to talk to you for
Jan 4, 1927
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New York Paper - Of Mr. Emmons’s Paper on A Concise Method of Showing Ore-Reserves (see p. 322)E. W. King, Bozeman, Mont.: The form of measuring up ore in sight looks very plausible, as illustrated in the paper of Mr. Emmons, but from my experience of many years of mining in Montana and Nevada,
Jan 1, 1913
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Cleveland Paper - The Maufacture of CokeBy F. E. Lucas
This paper is offered with considerable diflidence, since some of the statements made may not agree with the opinions of other members of the Institute. What I give is the result of some years of expe
Jan 1, 1913
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Washington Paper - Phosphorus in Pig-Iron, Steel and Iron-OreBy Clemens Jones
THE analytical history of phosphorus in its relation to the metallurgy of iron is an interesting study, the progress of which runs parallel with the development of the greatest industry in the world.
Jan 1, 1890
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Indexing Rock For Machine TunnelingBy D. U. Deere
The title of this chapter is "Indexing Rock for Machine Tunneling" or, a simplified approach to a very difficult problem. I do not think that we can divorce the considerations for conventional tunneli
Jan 1, 1970
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The Caliche Of Southern Arizona : An Example Of Deposition By The Vadose CirculationBy William P. Blake
IN southern Arizona and in Mexico the word caliche is in general use to denote a calcareous formation of considerable thickness and volume found a few inches, or a few feet, beneath the surface-soil,
Jan 1, 1902
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Australia-Recent Developments In Surface MiningBy W. A. Weimer
Australia, the land of the kangaroo, koala, and the platypus, is often referred to as "down under" by people of the Northern Hemisphere. It is a tropical land and has very little freezing and thawing;
Jan 1, 1969
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Sampling and Estimating Ore Deposits - Methods of Sampling and Estimating Copper Deposits - Sampling and Estimating Orebodies in the Warren District, Ariz.By Robert H. Dickson
Limestone replacement and contact metamorphic orebodies are 80 irregular that sampling and estimating are far less. exact than in more regular types of deposits; both the mineralized masses and the le
Jan 1, 1925
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Chattanooga Paper - The Jenks Corundum Mine, Macon County, N. C.By Rossiter W. Raymond
By the courtesy of Mr. Charles W. Jenks, of Boston, one of the owners of this interesting mine, I am enabled to lay before the Institute a suite of specimehs, illustrating its peculiar formation and t
Jan 1, 1879
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Hand Preparation of Coal in Southern BrazilBy Thomas Fraser, Abreu Alvaro
THE work described in this paper was carried out under the sponsorship of the Foreign Economics Administration and in cooperation with the Departamento Nacionál da Produção Mineral, Rio de Janeiro. Th
Jan 1, 1946
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Bridgeport Paper - A Uniform Method for the Assay of Copper Materials for Gold and Silver (see Discussion, p. 872)By Albert R. Ledoux
In Great Britain all analytical chemists are styled assayers, but in the United states a slight distinction is made, assayers being considered those analytical chemists who have chiefly to do with the
Jan 1, 1895
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An Equilibrium Theory of ProrationBy Joseph Pogue
ANY mechanism, either natural or artificial, for regulating the func-tioning of a given unit in the general economy must operate toward the maintenance of equilibrium if it is to survive. The petroleu
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Petroleum Economics - An Equilibrium Theory of ProfationBy Joseph E. Pogue
Any mechanism, either natural or artificial, for regulating the functioning of a given unit in the general economy must operate toward the maintenance of equilibrium if it is to survive. The petroleum
Jan 1, 1938
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Atlantic City Paper - A Decade in American Blast-Furnace Practice (Discussion, p. 973)By F. Louis Grammer
The iron industry has been so markedly the cynosure of all eyes, that a sense of weariness has overtaken many on-lookers, and a new wonder is desired. While the commercial phase of the iron industr
Jan 1, 1905
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Boston Paper - Contributions to the Records of Lead Smelting in Blast FurnacesBy A. Eilers
A MARKED peculiarity of most of the smelting-works of the Far West is the looseness with which accounts of the operations are kept. Indeed, probably over half of the works do not keep any detailed acc
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Mechanized Cutting and Face Stripping in the RuhrBy R. R. Estill
THE rank of the Ruhr coal ranges from a high volatile bituminous coal to an anthracite, depending to some extent on the original depth of the seam. The average Ruhr coal corresponds to a soft bitumino
Jan 12, 1950
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Engineering Research - Some Principles Governing the Choice of Length and Diameter of Tubing in Oil Wells (With Discussion)By J. Versluys
A well can flow exclusively through the casing or exclusively through a tubing but can also flow partly through a casing and at the top part through a tubing. The main principles of the flowing of wel
Jan 1, 1931
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Contributions to the Records of Lead-Smelting in Blast FurnacesBy A. Eilers
COMPOSITION OF CHARGES AND CONSUMPTION OF FUEL AT VARIOUS WORKS. A MARKED peculiarity of most of the smelting-works of the Far West is the looseness with which accounts of the operations are kept.
Jan 1, 1873